Ah, that's actually extremely valuable information.
Your previous post had poured cold water on my theory that Bearer 0 INP-REIN was a direct indicator of retransmission low or high.
With that, I'm still of the belief that...
Bearer 0 INP_REIN = 0 is retx low and
Bearer 0 INP_REIN = 1 is retx high
j0hn, some positive feedback for your theory:
By line had a DLM intervention, early hours of this morning, changes noted:
DS I/L changed from 8 to 4 (first change since G.Inp activation)
B0 INP changed from 47 to 52 (first change since G.Inp activation)
DS SNRM changed from 6.8 to 5.7
B0 INP_REIN changed from 0 to 1 (first change since G.Inp activation)
DS synch was the highest I have ever had @ 39595 Kbps.
For MDWS reference, my G.Inp activation date was 27/07/17.
Unfortunately, I did not notice the DLM re-synch this morning and carried out a planned outage to replace my router/modem DSL cable, would have liked to have seen my DS IP profile after the DLM re-synch, too late now.
After my planned re-synch, my DS IP profile has certainly decreased from yesterday and my DS data throughput ratio is now 92%, was approx. 97%.
Looks like I am now on retx high profile and yes, the B0 INP_REIN state of 1 appears to be a positive indication of this.
I read in another post by one of the "BTOR members" that B0 INP in the 50's could also be an indicator of retx high profile, again, my experience would seem to conform to this thinking.
As to why DLM intervened this morning:
I have an exceptionally stable and noise free line (see MDWS), the only reason I can think of is I put my ZyXEL1312A into full modem/router service on Friday, retiring my HG612, after a 30 min. + S/D. I had a few re-synch attempts until I worked out that the DSL LED being orange means VDSL synch OK (finally read the manual) was expecting green, definately no more than 3 attempts, is DLM punishing me for this ?
Edit 6/11/17:
On closer examination of MDWS noted an occurance of 11 SES's (very unusual to record any on my line) just before the DLM intervention, perhaps a contributory factor ?